Court orders end to abortion-pill mandate for two Christian colleges

Order also declares that the mandate violated the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act

A nearly six-year legal battle ends in victory for a private college and university that wish to operate according to their religious beliefs.

A federal district court issued an order, June 4, which permanently prevents the federal government from enforcing the Obamacare abortion-pill mandate against a Christian college and seminary in Indiana and a Christian university in California. The order also declares that the mandate violates the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

The Obama-era abortion-pill mandate forces employers, regardless of their religious or moral convictions, to provide abortion-inducing drugs, sterilization, and contraception through their health plans under threat of heavy penalties. The Department of Justice, under the Trump administration, abandoned its defense of the flawed mandate, which the Department of Health and Human Services implemented during the previous administration.

“Religious organizations have the freedom to peacefully operate according to their beliefs without the threat of punishment by the government. Monday’s order fully affirms that freedom and provides permanent protection from the mandate,” said Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel Gregory S. Baylor.

“These schools no longer have to fear being forced to pay fines for simply abiding by the Christian beliefs they teach and espouse, and they are no longer required to fill out forms authorizing coverage for abortion-inducing drugs,” Baylor explained. “The government has many other ways to ensure access to these drugs without forcing people of faith to violate their deepest convictions.”

ADF attorneys represent Grace College and Seminary in Indiana and Biola University in California, both of which specifically object to providing abortifacients.

“After reconsideration of their position, Defendants [with the federal government] now agree that enforcement of the rules regarding the contraceptive mandate against employers with sincerely held religious objections would violate the RFRA…,” the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division, wrote in its order in Grace Schools v. Azar, adding that “the public interest in the vindication of religious freedom favors the entry of an injunction and declaratory judgment.”

Another federal district court issued a similar order last month for four Christian universities in Oklahoma. ADF attorneys and allied attorneys continue to litigate numerous other lawsuits against the mandate.